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worst of the peasants' harvest work was over before heading out, yet found out they were still horribly busy in early October. As he discovered, "in work in sectarian parishes, far from everything depends on the diligence and good will of the missionary. "Life conditions ... carry a huge and sometimes decisive significance. And above all - the season of the year" [18]. Time and again, he met peasants who seemed eager to discuss spiritual matters but told him that he should come back and spend the winter in their village, when they had time [19]. And one of the central messages of his autobiography was that all the book learning in the world could not replace getting to know the villagers as people. Throughout his account, he is hosted by various village worthies, who provide an entree for him into the local community. He relies on the local schoolteacher for advice and inside knowledge - and to lend him authority [20]. Most importantly, the man who had fancied himself a "pioneer among the clergy" learned that the missionary's crucial ally was the local priest. Parish priests had usually not enjoyed the higher education of many missionaries, and they tended to regard them as inspectors, sent to judge them. But what he learned was that they were a fountain of local knowledge. Their reports to "the city" were full of what they thought their superiors wanted to hear - but in person, they were "exceptional experts on popular life." While they might lack knowledge and training, respecting them as friends and helpers could also arouse their excitement and motivation to improve their pastoral work [21].

Now of course many missionaries were themselves parish priests who took on additional leadership in this area. And the vast majority of diocesan missionaries, unlike Bogoliubov, were themselves ordained clergymen. Still, as a group, the missionaries had a difficult position in the Church. The 1888 mission rules had envisioned a corps of diocesan missionaries composed of priests with theological academy or seminary diplomas, paid out of diocesan funds. They would be assisted by parish priests appointed as local missionaries and by enthusiastic and knowledgeable lay volunteers [22]. In fact, although three quarters of the diocesan missionaries at the 1897 missionary congress in Kazan' were priests, a significant minority, including Bogoliubov, who represented Tambov diocese, were lay people who had chosen to become full-time missionaries. And unlike the overwhelming majority of priests, almost forty percent of them - and every single non-ordained diocesan missionary - held higher degrees [23]. In their discussion of the methods of their work at the congress, and in Missionerskoe Obozrienie in the previous months, they would emphasize themes Bogoliubov addressed in his memoir: the ill-defined nature of their positions in their various dioceses, the fact that they often were employed by church brotherhoods that made decisions about their work without ever consulting them, that they lacked pension funds, and that they were often resented by local priests [24]. And, as did Bogoliubov, they added their voice to the campaign for improved conditions for parish priests, in the belief that this was essential to improving the atmosphere in Orthodox parishes across the country and giving priests the time and peace of mind they needed for religious education measures [25].

Bogoliubov's initial encounters with the village also forced him to re-think broader cultural assumptions he had gleaned from his academic education. He had not understood, he realized, "the intense struggle that was taking place in the depths of the people around our religious beliefs." His seminary education had prepared him to think in terms of the ideas of N.Ia. Danilevskii. In his famous book, Russia and Europe, once described as the "catechism or codex of Slavophilism," Danilevskii had contrasted the materialist, corrupt, and factionalized Romano-Germanic civilization with the organic, Slavic-Orthodox culture of Russia, and predicted that the latter would one day come to dominate - or rather save - civilization. Bogoliubov had expected that Orthodoxy would be essential, native, and inalienable for the Russian peasant. Yet how was it, he wondered, "that many Russian people were leaving their natural element [stikhiia] and consciously and with conviction accepting a religious faith in the form of shtundism - the Baptist and Molokan faiths, where precisely personal, individual interests, [and] the personal, individual conscience are placed at the forefront, and where that which is called "the conciliar consciousness" [sobornoe soznanie - in the sense of community with God and fellow worshippers] is devalued?" But his own observations and, especially, his conversations with priests and other members of the "village intelligentsia" showed him, instead, that our people does not hold to the Church mystically or essentially. The peasants turned


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